Gold Bullion Standard
Under a gold bullion standard, countries hold reserves of gold
in the form of bars rather than coins, removing gold from monetary circulation
in the form of coinage. Instead each country establishes an official price of a
fixed weight of gold in terms of its own currency. The United States was on a
gold bullion standard from the 1930s until 1971, and the official United States
price of gold was $35 per ounce, committing the United States Treasury to
selling gold at that price.
The gold bullion standard was a means of stretching existing supplies of
gold, which were not sufficient to support the international monetary system at
prevailing price levels. The famous British economist David Ricardo had first
suggested the idea after the Napoleonic Wars.
Under a gold bullion standard, private citizens can only hold gold for
industrial purposes, such as dentistry or jewelry manufacture. Monetary gold is
owned by the government and is used solely to settle international transactions.
Countries without substantial gold reserves can function on a gold exchange
standard, while countries with significant gold reserves remain on a gold
bullion standard.
The world began to move toward a gold bullion standard after World War I,
when the world’s trading partners sought to return to a version of a gold
standard. With the complete breakdown of the gold exchange standard in the
1930s, the world moved toward a gold bullion standard. The gold bullion standard
allowed countries to manage domestic currency supplies somewhat independently of
international gold flows, giving governments more flexibility to meet the crisis
of depression.
At the end of World War II the world’s trading partners established the
Bretton Woods system, putting most nations on a gold bullion standard. The
United States emerged from World War II owning most of the noncommunist world’s
gold. Under the Bretton Woods system, the United States defined the value of the
dollar in a fixed weight of gold. The United States agreed to buy and sell gold
at a rate of $35 per ounce, and most other nations set the value of their own
unit of money equal to a certain value in U.S. dollars.
The post–World War II gold exchange standard came to an end in 1971 when the
United States stopped converting dollars into gold. By 1971 foreign central
banks held more dollars than the United States could redeem in gold without
substantially devaluing the dollar.
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